ChemTeam: Photo Gallery Menu Melvin Calvin; Frederick Gardner Cottrell; christiaan eijkman; Luigi Galvani; WilliamRobert Robert Millikan; Henry Moseley (two images); Alfred nobel; Ida Noddack. http://dbhs.wvusd.k12.ca.us/Gallery/GalleryMenu.html
Extractions: Return to ChemTeam Main Menu I remain on the prowl for more images of people (and things) relevant to discoveries in chemistry. Any suggestions as to sources would be appreciated. You may want to turn off graphics and then just load the images you are interested in. Gallery Zero comprises the most recent additions. They will be moved into alphabetical order as new images replace them. The Images of Physicists site (maintained by Harry Nelson of UC, Santa Barbara) has a wide selection of images as well as links to other image banks of physicists. The Edgar Fahs Smith Memorial Collection is maintain at UPenn. It has a wide range of chemistry images, from people to instruments. You may also be interested in my Classic Papers in Chemistry section. If you are interested in obtaining permission to use these photos in your project, please see my response. Richard Abegg Anders Jonas Angstrom Aristotle Svante Arrhenius (two images) ... Francis W. Aston
EIJKMAN TEST (Search FastHealth.com) EIJKMAN TEST ability to produce gas when grown in glucose media at 46°C (114.8°F) eijkman,christiaan (18581930 In 1929 eijkman was awarded the nobel Prize for http://www.fasthealth.com/dictionary/e/Eijkman_test.php
Extractions: Eijkman, Christiaan (1858-1930), Dutch physiologist. Eijkman introduced his test for coliform bacteria in a 1904 paper. His most important work, however, concerned the etiology of beriberi. While in the Dutch East Indies, he studied fowl affected with polyneuritis, a condition similar to beriberi, and discovered in 1897 that the disease was caused by a diet of polished rice. A cure was effected by the restoration of the discarded hulls to the diet. In 1929 Eijkman was awarded the Nobel Prize for Physiology or Medicine.
Potret Juni 1997 Gatot Subroto), christiaan eijkman, menemukan hubungan antara kekurangan vitaminB1 dengan beriberi. Penemuaan itu mengantar eijkman meraih hadiah nobel pada http://www.indomedia.com/intisari/1997/juni/sangkot.htm
Extractions: SEBATAS FANTASI Sebagai ilmuwan beken Prof Sangkot Marzuki M.D. Ph.D. sebenarnya sudah hidup sebagai peneliti mapan di Australia. Tetapi nasib berkata lain, ia dipanggil Habibie untuk memimpin Lembaga Biologi Molekuler Eijkman. Bagaimana pendapatnya tentang dampak keberhasilan kloning domba pada manusia, rekayasa manusia super, dan pemetaan DNA manusia? Berikut obrolan Intisari dengannya di ruang kerjanya yang antik dan asri. Prof. Sangkot Marzuki M.D.,Ph.D. (Foto: Gde.) A kankah manusia bisa diklon menyusul keberhasilan kloning domba Dolly oleh ilmuwan Skotlandia? Prof Sangkot Marzuki MD. Ph.D., pakar biologi molekuler berpendapat mustahil dicobakan pada manusia karena tingkat suksesnya rendah sekali, 1 : 250. Kalaupun keberhasilan itu meningkat di kemudian hari, sains dan masyarakat sangat menentang penerapannya pada manusia. . Itu mungkin baru bisa dilakukan selama ribuan tahun sepanjang evolusi manusia. Jadi saya melihatnya sebagai fantasi belaka, seperti cerita film Jurrasic Park Flash Gordon ," katanya.
The Scientist - Putting 'Errors' In Perspective Philosopher of science Douglas Allchin of the University of Minnesota detailed thework of christiaan eijkman, who shared the 1929 nobel Prize for medicine for http://www.the-scientist.com/yr2000/mar/russo_p1_000320.html
Extractions: Early cartographers, without the luxury of an aerial view of their surroundings, did their best to map expanses of land based on expeditions and, of course, on previous maps. Although quite helpful, they and their maps were often less than perfect. Cartographers sketching the layout of the American colonies, for example, might map a lake or a mountain that simply didn't exist. Subsequent maps might then incorporate the make-believe landmark, sometimes even "moving" it several miles from its previously reported location. Symposium presenter and organizer Lindley Darden , a professor of philosophy at the University of Maryland, came up with the idea for the symposium after getting involved in recent lobbying; she'd written a paper for a congressional report on an array of science policy issues. Among them: how to protect scientists who have unintentionally, and without misconduct or fraud, erred in their researchfor example, 1950s researchers who failed to elucidate the health risks associated with tobacco. Two years ago, to protect its own interests, Metropolitan Life Insurance Co. pursued legislation that would protect scientists from results-related lawsuits. A few of its clients, including Syracuse University, had been threatened with lawsuits because of scientists' errors, and MetLife stood to lose a good deal of money. It asked Darden and others to advocate and explain the historically natural role of errors in science.
Géniesenherbe.org - Prix Nobel De Physiologie Et Médecine Translate this page nobel de physiologie et médecine est attribué par l'Assemblée nobel de l 1929,christiaan eijkman (Pays-Bas) et sir Frederick Gowland Hopkins (Grande-Bretagne http://www.geniesenherbe.org/theorie/prix/nobmed.html
Ëàóðåàòû Íîáåëåâñêèõ ïðåìèé ïî ôèçèîëîãèè Alphabetical listing of nobel prize laureates in Physiology and Medicine. Name.Year Awarded. Ehrlich, Paul, 1908. eijkman, christiaan, 1929. Einthoven, Willem,1924. http://orel.rsl.ru/archiv/nob_med.htm
Extractions: PHYSIOLOGY AND MEDICINE Alphabetical listing of Nobel prize laureates in Physiology and Medicine Name Year Awarded Adrian, Lord Edgar Douglas Arber, Werner Axelrod, Julius Baltimore, David Banting, Sir Frederick Grant Barany, Robert Beadle, George Wells Behring, Emil Adolf Von Bekesy, Georg Von Benacerraf, Baruj Bergstroem, Sune K. Bishop, J. Michael Black, Sir James W. Bloch, Konrad Blumberg, Baruch S. Bordet, Jules Bovet, Daniel Brown, Michael S. Burnet, Sir Frank Macfarlane Cajal, Santiago Ramon Y Carrel, Alexis Chain, Sir Ernst Boris Claude, Albert Clintock, Barbara Mc Cohen, Stanley Cori, Carl Ferdinand Cori, Gerty Theresa Cormack, Alan M. Cournand, Andre Frederic Crick, Francis Harry Compton Dale, Sir Henry Hallett Dam, Henrik Carl Peter Dausset, Jean De Duve, Christian Delbruck, Max Doherty, Peter C.
Nobel przyznano, Johannes Andreas Grib Fibiger, Julius Wagner von Jauregg, Charles JulesHenry Nicolle, christiaan eijkman, Frederick Gowland Hopkins, Karl Landsteiner, http://www.kalendarium.pl/kalendarium/html/tabela.htm
Extractions: Jean Henri Dunant Frédéric Passy Élie Ducommun Charles Albert Gobat ... Henri Marie La Fontaine Nie przyznano Nie przyznano Nie przyznano Miêdzynarodowy Komitet Czerwonego Krzy¿a Nie przyznano Thomas Woodrow Wilson Léon Victor Auguste Bourgeois Karl Hjalmar Branting, Christian Lous Lange Fridtjof Nansen Nie przyznano Nie przyznano Chamberlain Sir Joseph Austen, Charles Gates Dawes Aristide Briand, Gustav Stresemann Ferdinand Édouard Buisson, Ludwig Quidde Nie przyznano Frank Billings Kellogg Nathan Söderblom Jane Addams, Nicholas Murray Butler Nagrody nie przyznano Ralph Norman Angell Lane Arthur Henderson Carl von Ossietzky Carlos Saavedra Lamas ... Miêdzynarodowe Biuro Nansenowskie Nagrody nie przyznano Nagrody nie przyznano Nagrody nie przyznano Nagrody nie przyznano Nagrody nie przyznano Miêdzynarodowy Komitet Czerwonego Krzy¿a Cordell Hull Emil Adolf Behring Ronald Ross ... Robert Bárány Nie przyznano Nie przyznano Nie przyznano Nie przyznano Jules Bordet Schack August Steenberg Krogh Nie przyznano Archibald Vivian Hill, Otto Fritz Meyerhof
Error Probes christiaan eijkman discovered that a bacterium in polished rice caused eijkman verifiedhis theory with a massive study of He was awarded a nobel Prize for his http://www.dragonscience.com/view/probes.html
Extractions: Error Probes, Truth Probes, and Space Probes Christiaan Eijkman discovered that a bacterium in polished rice caused beriberi and an anti-toxin in the coating cured it. This was in 1886, just after the germ theory of disease had become fashionable. Eijkman verified his theory with a massive study of 280 000 people. He ruled out the possibility of other causal factorssanitation, hygiene, and so on. And he cured victims by feeding them unpolished rice, just as his theory predicted. He was awarded a Nobel Prize for his achievement. Gerrit Grijns followed in Eijkman's footsteps. But Gerrit was a crackpot, that is, he had an altogether different idea. He imagined beriberi was caused not by something in the rice but by something not in the rice. He began looking for data that would raise doubts about Eijkman's theory: Beriberi was also associated with diets of tapioca root; foods other than rice polishings could cure it. And no one could find Eijkman's bacterium. Both theories explained the facts. Both theories predicted the cure. Both theories were verified. But Grijns' theory could be applied to a much larger assemblage of data and had benefits far beyond the domain of rice diets and beriberi.
Eijkman Centennial On Infections In The 21st Century ago, christiaan eijkman was inaugurated Professor of Hygiene and Bacteriology atUtrecht University, Utrecht, the Netherlands. In 1928, he received the nobel http://www.ewi.med.uu.nl/centennial/index2.html
Extractions: Eijkman Centennial on Infections in the 21st Century "Successes from the past - challenges for the future" Past Event: You can use this website for futher reference CHAIRMAN'S INVITATION AND MEETING OBJECTIVES T his year, exactly 100 years ago, Christiaan Eijkman was inaugurated Professor of Hygiene and Bacteriology at Utrecht University , Utrecht, the Netherlands. In 1928, he received the Nobel Prize for his research on beri-beri, a disease that is caused by a vitamin deficiency, not an infection. Eijkman conducted his seminal work on beri-beri in the former Dutch East Indies between 1886 and 1898. When he started this research, he suspected a microbial pathogen to be the cause of the disease, but discovered a nutrient deficiency instead. This missing nutrient proved to be a vitamin. After becoming professor at Utrecht, Eijkman , together with Beijerinck, founded The Netherlands Society of Microbiology. Later, he became its second president. T he Eijkman-Winkler Institute would like to celebrate this centennial by presenting the current available knowledge on known infectious diseases and emerging infections. A selected group of experts in the field will present
Second International Eijkman Symposium christiaan eijkman received a nobel prize in 1929 for his research on beriberi,a disease that appeared not to be an infection but a vitamin-deficiency disease http://www.ewi.med.uu.nl/symposium/chairmen_files/body.htm
Extractions: Hotel Lido Lakes, Bogor, Indonesia CHAIRMEN'S ADDRESS An International Eijkman Symposium was held in The Hague, The Netherlands in 1998 to celebrate that exactly 100 years before Christiaan Eijkman was inaugurated as professor in Hygiene and Bacteriology at the Utrecht University, The Netherlands. Christiaan Eijkman received a Nobel prize in 1929 for his research on beri-beri, a disease that appeared not to be an infection but a vitamin-deficiency disease. Eijkman had done his seminal work in the former Dutch East Indies between 1886 and 1898; the centenary of the discovery was commemorated in an International Symposium in Jakarta, Indonesia in 1990. The symposium will be held at the Hotel Lido Lakes, Bogor, a 1.5 hour drive from the famous Eijkman Institute in Jakarta. The social program for both delegates and accompanying persons will include a sight visit to this institute, and a dinner and musical performance, hopefully, at the Botanical Garden in Bogor. We hope that you will have some time, to visit Java or the surrounding interesting islands (or neighbouring Bali) before or after the symposium. We are looking forward to welcoming you to the Second International Eijkman Symposium in 2001 in Bogor and Jakarta.
Behind The Name: Nobel Prize Winners By Category Behind the Name the etymology and history of first names. nobel Prize Winnersby Category. Name, Years, Type, Also Known As. christiaan eijkman, 1929, Medicine, http://www.behindthename.com/namesakes/nobelchro.html
Extractions: t h e e t y m o l o g y a n d h i s t o r y o f f i r s t n a m e s Nobel Prize Winners by Category Name Years Type Also Known As Jacobus Henricus van 't Hoff Chemistry Hermann Emil Fischer Chemistry Svante August Arrhenius Chemistry Sir William Ramsay Chemistry Johann Friedrich Wilhelm Adolf von Baeyer Chemistry Henri Moissan Chemistry Eduard Buchner Chemistry Ernest Rutherford Chemistry Wilhelm Ostwald Chemistry Otto Wallach Chemistry Marie Curie Chemistry Paul Sabatier Chemistry Victor Grignard Chemistry Alfred Werner Chemistry Theodore William Richards Chemistry Chemistry Fritz Haber Chemistry Walther Hermann Nernst Chemistry Frederick Soddy Chemistry Francis William Aston Chemistry Fritz Pregl Chemistry Richard Adolf Zsigmondy Chemistry The Svedberg Chemistry (Theodor) Heinrich Otto Wieland Chemistry Adolf Otto Reinhold Windaus Chemistry Arthur Harden Chemistry Hans Karl August Simon von Euler-Chelpin Chemistry Hans Fischer Chemistry Carl Bosch Chemistry Friedrich Bergius Chemistry Irving Langmuir Chemistry Harold Clayton Urey Chemistry Chemistry Chemistry Petrus Josephus Wilhelmus Debye Chemistry (Peter) Paul Karrer Chemistry Walter Norman Haworth Chemistry Richard Kuhn Chemistry Adolf Friedrich Johann Butenandt Chemistry Leopold Ruzicka Chemistry George de Hevesy Chemistry Otto Hahn Chemistry Artturi Ilmari Virtanen Chemistry James Batcheller Sumner Chemistry John Howard Northrop Chemistry Wendell Meredith Stanley Chemistry Sir Robert Robinson Chemistry Arne Wilhelm Kaurin Tiselius Chemistry William Francis Giauque Chemistry Kurt Alder Chemistry Otto Paul Hermann Diels
EIJKAMN, O DETETIVE DO BERIBÉRI Translate this page christiaan eijkman recebeu o prêmio nobel em 1929 por seus trabalhos sobre o beribéri,juntamente com Frederick Hopkins, este último por suas pesquisas http://jmr.medstudents.com.br/beriberi.htm
Www.kronia.com/thoth/thothV01.txt AND SPACE PROBES By Mel Acheson christiaan eijkman discovered that eijkman verifiedhis theory with a massive study of 280 He was awarded a nobel Prize for his http://www.kronia.com/thoth/thothV01.txt
Extractions: THOTH A Catastrophics Newsletter VOL V, No 1 Jan 15, 2001 EDITOR: Amy Acheson PUBLISHER: Michael Armstrong LIST MANAGER: Brian Stewart CONTENTS ERROR PROBES, TRUTH PROBES, AND SPACE PROBES . . . by Mel Acheson YEAR TWO THOUSAND AND ONE. . . . . . . . . . . . .by Dave Talbott HUBBLE TELESCOPE RELEASE CHALLENGED . . . . . . . . by Halton Arp A PERPENDICULAR EXPLOSION . . . . . . . by Kroniatalk and Friends STRANGE GRAVITY . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .by Wal Thornhill >>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>-
Medical Literature BCP Jansen Het levenswerk van christiaan eijkman 18581930 was promoted MD cum laudeby Donders on 4 July 1885 after defending this thesis.1924 nobel Prize for http://www.friedeschemolen.nl/medisch_e.html
Extractions: ID Book info ()Price Order EDWARDS, HAROLD C. EERLAND, L.D. Het scalpel en de kaars. " Herinneringen aan jeugd- en ontwikkelingsjaren van een chirurg-vrouwenarts, in het bijzonder aan zijn zelfstandige arbeid in het voormalige Nederlands-Indie en Nederland". 1897-1926-1937-1966. Assen, v.Gorcum 1970. Or.cl. 138 pp. (ex.libr.copy). EGGINK, C.O. Resultaten van endodontische behandelingen beoordeeld volgens een gestandaardiseerde methode. Utrecht, Schotanus en Jens 1964. Or.wr. 222 pp. Thesis. (EHRLICH, PAUL). Walter Greiling: Paul Ehrlich zijn leven en werk. Vertaling W.E.Gritters Doublet. Leiden, Stafleu (1955). Or.krt. 221p. (EHRLICH, PAUL). Walter Greiling: Paul Ehrlich zijn leven en werk. Vertaling W.E.Gritters Doublet. Leiden, Stafleu (1955). Or.wr. 221 pp. EHRLICH, PAUL. EICHHORST, HERMANN (EIJKMAN Chr.). B.C.P.Jansen: Het levenswerk van Christiaan Eijkman 1858-1930. Haarlem, Bohn 1959. Or.krt. VII, 205p. (EIJKMAN, Chr.). B.C.P. Jansen: Het levenswerk van Christiaan Eijkman 1858-1930. Haarlem, Bohn 1959. Or.wr. VII, 205 pp. (EINTHOVEN, WILLEM).
Nature Publishing Group accounts, the hero of the beriberi story is christiaan eijkman, a Dutch seek to toppleeijkman's claim to fame (eijkman received the nobel prize in http://www.nature.com/cgi-taf/DynaPage.taf?file=/nature/journal/v407/n6806/full/
August In Chemistry gases; christiaan eijkman born 1858 discovered Vitamin B 1 (thiamine)and its role in beriberi; nobel Prize (medicine), 1929. Cato http://webserver.lemoyne.edu/faculty/giunta/August.html
Nobel Prizes: Physiology & Medicine And Chemistry Official Site of the nobel Committees Prizes. 1928 Charles Nicolle (France), forwork on typhus exanthematicus 1929 christiaan eijkman (Netherlands), for http://fig.cox.miami.edu/~cmallery/255/255hist/nobelprize.htm
Extractions: 1901 Emil A. von Behring (Germany), for work on serum therapy against diphtheria 1902 Sir Ronald Ross (England), for work on malaria 1903 Niels R. Finsen (Denmark), for his treatment of lupus vulgaris with concentrated light rays 1904 Ivan P. Pavlov (U.S.S.R.), for work on the physiology of digestion 1905 Robert Koch (Germany), for work on tuberculosis 1906 Camillo Golgi (Italy) and Santiago Ramón y Cajal (Spain), for work on structure of the nervous system 1907 Charles L. A. Laveran (France), for work with protozoa in the generation of disease 1908 Paul Ehrlich (Germany), and Elie Metchnikoff (U.S.S.R.), for work on immunity
Extractions: August 11 ~ Lots of Ideas Nutrition Almanac "The b e s t way to have a good ideas is to have a l o t of i d e a s Linus Pauling Dutch physician and pathologist Christiaan Eijkman (1858-1930) was born on this day in Gelderland, The Netherlands. Eijkman is best known for his 1890s research in the tropical jungles of the Dutch East Indies (which is now Indonesia) of the disease beriberi . Beriberi, Sinhalese for "weak," impaired the nerves and heart. With an epidemic in Asia, as many as eighty percent died of the disease. Wisdom is not acquired save as the result of investigation," Hindu theologian Sankara Acharya once said. Eijkman invetigated the cause of beriberi and found that a person had to live in an area for several weeks to contract the disease. By chance, he noticed the symptoms in chickens and narrowed the cause to their poor diet. "Prevention," said the Renaissance scholar Erasmus, "is better than cure." Eijkman concluded that beriberi was caused by depriving the body of certain unknown substances, later identified as vitamins. For this discovery , he received the Nobel Prize for Physiology and Medicine in 1929.
Extractions: this bacteriologist linked beriberi with dietary deficiency Jan Verhoef Christiaan Eijkman traveled to Berlin in 1885 to meet Robert Koch and learn some elementary bacteriological techniques in his laboratory. While there, he went to Café Bauer and, while seeking a Dutch newspaper, met two of his countrymen from Utrecht University-Cornelis Winkler, a neurologist, and Cornelis Adrianus Pekelharing, a professor of pathology. Financial Hardships Shaped Eijkman's Early Career The seventh of ten children, Christiaan Eijkman was born on 11 August 1858 in the rural village of Nijkerk, in the eastern-central part of the Netherlands. His father, a schoolmaster, ran a boarding school at the time, but soon moved the family closer to Amsterdam. Early on, Eijkman proved to be an exceptionally bright youngster who showed a desire to study medicine. However, because funds were limited, he signed up with the colonial army as a way of obtaining his medical training, negotiating an agreement with the Department of War to pay the bill for his training in exchange for his services in the army in the Dutch East Indies. After finishing his medical studies, he also obtained a doctoral degree in physiology; the title of his thesis was "Polarization in the Nervous System" (Over Polarisatie in de Zenuwen).
Unraveling The Enigma Of ... - "a Substance Different Fr... Hopkins and christiaan Eijkmanin belated recognition of his seminal work with beriberiwouldlater share the 1929 nobel Prize for Physiology or Medicine for http://www.beyonddiscovery.org/content/view.asp?I=420